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Temptations.

You need not open that door. Please run.

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THE BOOK OF LAMENTATIONS

Like an eulogy at a funeral the book of Lamentations is meant to mourn a loss, the loss of a nation. Author, Recipients. Jeremiah, the author was of priestly descent and lived in the little village of Anathoth, a short distance north of Jerusalem. He was called whiles still young. The prophet’s call took place in the 13th year of the reign king Josiah, 626 B.C. and five years before the Book of the Law was found in the Temple. He is also the author of the book that bears his name, Jeremiah. The Prophet’s mission was a sad one; his office was like a minister obliged to accompany a criminal to the scaffold. Judah had disobeyed God and turned a death ear to all invitations and warnings to return; the end was approaching. Divisions. The book consist of five independent poems, each an expression of grief. It deals with the calamities that befell the people of Judah and Jerusalem in consequence of the siege and capture of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans. I.                    Chapte

CONVERTING GRACE AND THE SINNER

This is just some random things I read from the Bible and other places in my study on how Grace helps me in the fight against sin. Forgive me for not listing all my sources and also for not arranging my thoughts (when I thought to publish it it was just for the blog randomgleaning.blogspot.com, so understand the randomness of it). Sorry. Titus 2.11 - for the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all, training us to renounce impiety and worldly passions, and in the present age to live lives that are self-controled, upright and godly. Romans 8.13 - if you through the Spirit mortify the deeds of the body you shall live. The choicest believers, who are assuredly freed from the condemning power of sin, aught yet to make it their business all their days to mortify the indwelling power of sin. The vigor, and power and comfort of our spiritual life depends on the mortification of the deeds of the flesh. 1 Corinthians 15.34 - awake to righteousness and sin not. The mortificati

SERVING IN HUMILITY

SERVING IN HUMILITY {JOSHUA 3.7-17; 1 THESSALONIANS 2.9-13; MATTHEW 23.1-12}. I will like us to begin our narrative from Matthew 23.1-13. In this text we come across a certain group of people our Lord Jesus Christ warns us against. These are persons called to serve others but because they have the wrong understanding of what service is they demand that the people they are to serve rather serve them. The whole nation order is thrown into disorder for the servants are now being served. To use the language of the Prophets – servants are riding on horses whiles princess walk. Some of us here have been called to serve, some will be called to serve. How true is that statement? I would like to say there is nothing true of that statement for we are all servants called to serve. The truth that can be said is that some of us will serve well, whiles others will fail terribly at our service. Christ tells us not to be that kind of servant who fails. Do not be that man. Do not be th